Speedway Flyer, Volume 20, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1952 — Page 4

Page 4

WINTER ONLY 25 LEFT —Q IHH(K6^VALUE^ — ONLY $1 j.OO ALL WOOL BROKEN SIZES——SOME WITH ZIPPED-IN LINING NYLON HOSE SPECIAL 80/ Pair OUR BUDGET CLUB WINNER Mrs. C. S. Miller Pams FASHIONS 1610 North Lyndhurst BElmont 5766 HOURS MONDAY—Noon to, 8:30 p.m. TUES.. WED.. THURS., SAT.—9:3O a.m. to 6 p.m. FRIDAY—3:3O a.m. to 8:30 pan.

e AMBULANCE SERVICE Try our Ambulance Service tor greater comfort—lmmediate "Around the Clock" service—To any pari of City, State out of State. “Chapel of the Flowers” STEVENS MORTUARY 3196 W. 16th Street IMpcrial 0125

“HAM” STAG PARTY Thursday, February 7, 1952 7:00 PM to 12:00 PM St Christopher Social Room 5335 W. 16th STREET Refreshments Games Door Prizes 100 HAMS ADMISSION—SI.OO

ETTER Phillips ©Station 14th & Main Sts. Speedway Indiana Motor Tune Up Tires Batteries Brake Service Generator and Starter Repaired - Wheel Balancing 24 HR. ROAD ft WRECKING SERVICE. PICKUP AND DELIVER YOUR CAR. Phone: BE 0066 Res: BE 4296

SAVE LIVES!

Complete Insurance Service Auto Financing PHILLIPS’ INSURANCE AGENCY Neal McCracken Belmont 2211 4031 W. 14th St

“As Near As Your Phone”

There is always a place for flowers in our lives, in our homes, on our clothes. Though other things go out of fashion, though styles in dress become passe, home decorations become revolutionalized, flowers continue to lure us with their age-old beauty. Flowers never go out of fashion!

THE SPEEDWAY FLYER

BE lovely ALWAYS... |H£L We can help you find the way to loveliness. Our experienced operaiors will style your hair to fit your personality. * - » MURRAY BEAUTY SHOP 1344 Main Street BElmont 1701

ill

DUPERIES - CORNICES TERMS IF DESIRED EMMETT VENETIAN BUND CO. Open 8 ajn. to 5 pan. Daily 5242 Crawfordsville Road BElmont 4551

WE NEED SPEEDWAY PROPERTY & WEST Free Appraisals by Experienced Salesmen List with the PEOPLE'S REALTY COMPANY 1007 People’s Bank Building FR. 2459 J. J. LOGSDON, Speedway Representative CYpress 0157 5110 CRAWFORDSVILLE ROAD

SPKIAUY DfCOHATO Horton > VALBffIM BODS ASSORTS© ( chocolates | Dtliciout Cream,, core- / I hmiU ©nd noußatfa coated with dark and milk __ chocolate. 14 Oi. Ban 1.39 NywNcW - - t MMHCAN CBSNM CROCMAIK N^mer NMf 2.H milk WMHKgW CHOCOLATES / Widg vartety of lusdows f confections dippod in choc* I olate containino 4 \ choppediwtematt.lß. lofU 1 *WTMMSNOUSUCTIBa" / Ant'd chocolotec by a >0 f Nymer Neal. lb. Box IeVV Exquisite I A VRHOS ASSORTED I CHOCOLATES 1 A A package of rare A f 1 «** goodnew, beauty. 18. AoW I J I*. BOX 4.80 V lIjMtM 1 HHNT and NUTS HymorNool ♦> "i laßl SflHEl CREAMS and ( mrt< ' COKMAU \ wiTUXtiS: I COSMETICS uW center*. Milk a A A A f dark chocolate. 18. AoAW I find Hr—'M-I J VAEEfiTINE B —/ CARDS I Nnort (election of American \ fNpr in Valentino box. R.Qfi (VH X tn»BMi \ A Ik- UJ

g.' ''J ,ro»e BUTI.kIIJI I J—! <'|J

Nationally Advertised ROLLA-READ VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery

HOMES TO SELL IN SPEEDWAY - WANTED - HOMES TO SELL IN SPEEDWAY Herman Greenwood, --Speedway --City and Suburban Realtor a s . BElmont 0510 4030 West 10th Street BElmont 0510

A Chance To Help In Good WorK Would you like to help an unfortunate boy? The Boys School at Plainfield is in desperate need of musical instruments. They have twenty - four instruments and about forty-five boys eligible to take part in the band, and it is quite a coveted pleasure to be able to play in this band, so if you have any old instruments of any kind, will you donate them to help improve a boy who may not have had the opportunities of our own boys here in Speedway. 'There are 507 boys in the school, and The American Legion Auxiliaries sponsor a program at the school the third Sunday of each month, and any one interested in attending or giving an instrument kindly call Mrs. John B. Scholl, Be. 2152 after 5 p.m.

Butler Basketball * Undisputed possession of first place in. the hotly-contested Indiana Collegiate Conference race will provide the main objective for Butler’s improved basketball team when it clashes with Evansville’s surprising Purple Aces in the Fieldhouse Saturday night (Feb. 2). ’ On Monday night (Feb. 4) the Bulldogs will travel to lowa City to battle lowa’s top-ranking Hawkeyes who are in the thick of the struggle for Big-Ten laurels with Illinois.

The Bulldogs rule the league with St Joseph at 2-1. However, the Pumas will be idle until Feb. 4. Indiana State, after three consecutive loop victories, has slipped to third place via setbacks against Ball State and Evansville. A 73-58 loser to Butler in the Pocket City on Jan. 2, Evansville has since played the role of a giant-killer, knocking down Ball State and the Sycamores in its climb from the bottom rung of the loop’s ladder. The Bulldogs’ chances of repeating the previous triumph and thus earn their longest winning streak three games in two years hinge on a defensive alignment that can halt the sharpshooting tactics of Forward Bob Northerner. His 252 points in 19 games place him seventh among the state’s leading scorers and give him a 97 point advantage over Butler’s ace marksman, Orvis Burdsall. Looking ahead to the lowa game, the Bulldogs are fully aware of the fact that the Tedhot Hawkeyes have not been beaten on their home floor this year, Indiana, Oklahoma, Northwestern, Minnesota, Western Michigan, and DePauw, all having tried.

On the basis of performances to date, the hepped-up Hawkeyes, with a 12-1 record, should expect little if any trouble, but evidence gleaned from past history helps illuminate some glaring facts which the Hawkeyes aren’t apt to forget. An undermanned Bulldog squad upset the heavily-favored lowans last year, 54-51. lowa is the only Big Ten rival over which Butler holds an all-time edge, 5-3. The eight Butler-lowa battles have been hardwood classics in themselves. Butler has racked up 265 points and a 33.1 average, lowa, 257 points, and.a 32.1 average. Two battles were decided by two points; three games, by three points; and single games by four, five, and six points respectively. Butler constitutes the 14th quintet to try halting the nation’s fifth top-scorer, 6-8 Charles Darling, who’s on the road to re-writing several of the individual Big Ten scoring records. The rangy center has scored 319 points for a 24.5 average. He has emerged highman on the scoring pole 11 times, the last seven in succession. He’s gone over the 30 mark four times, and over 20, five times. Bob Clifton, in his third year as the regular guard, has paced the scoring in the two other contests. Tony Hinkle will challenge that pair with Burdsall and Keith Greve, forwards; Ray Stewart,

FINE JOB PRINTING * REASONABLE PRICES * QUALITY WORK V Can “Bill” Anderson BE. 1756. 5217 W. 15th St.

center; and Jim Crostay and Don Holloway, guards. Charles Engterth, the 6-4 sophomore center who became eligible at mid-year, will see considerable action as will the team’s top “flareman,” .George Theotanigf wtA, literally, won Butler's last two games, hitting four-for-four from the field in a last quarter splurge against Wabash and dumping tn the deciding baskets in the 51>68 victory over Valparaiso last Saturday night Bob Reed, having connected on 22 of 23 free throw attempts in this, Butler’s weakest, department will also aid the stretch drive for the loop crewn.

“CARE” Assembles A “Homebuilders Tool Kit* CARE’S plan to “help people to help themselves” brought the announcement today of a new addition to CARE’S variety of food and textile packages—it is a sls “Resettler’s Kit” to help refugees build homes and clear land. The new package is a kit of tools designed to help some of the more than ten million “Volksdeutsche” expellees and other Iron Curtain refugees now living in Western Germany and Berlin. The new tool package consists of a daw hammer, crosscut saw, shovel, spade, pickaxe, bucksaw, handaxe and a pair of pliers. Attempts are being mMle b£ the West German govenunedt to resettle thousands of the refugees and their families now in crowded camps and temporary shelters, but progress has*b|eew delayed by a serious lack of ordinary tools. German government officials and representatives of refugee groups have informed CARE that 20,000 “Volksdeutsche” and refugee families are in need of hand tools and other equipment for clearing aqd cultivating land and for home building. The tools, of excellent quality steel, tested by CARE, were purchased from German toolmakers, so that at the same time that resettled families are helped to build homes and raise food, additional employment is provided to German workers. So far, 500 of the tool kits have been allocated by CARE for distribution to Berlin and the Western zones of Germany. A contribution of sls to any CARE outlet for the Resettler’s Tool Kit can be made by any individual or any church, school, club or organization. CARE’s mission in Germany guarantees delivery, with aligned, receipt being retumed-lo the donor. CARE will select a family in greatest need of help in re-estab-lishing itself in the free world. Orders can be placed at the H. P. Wasson department store or the L. S. Ayres department store in Indianapolis. Union Carbide Newt

DK George O. Curine, Jr. has been elected a Director of Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation to succeed the late James A Rafferty, Vice-President and Director, according to an announcement by Fred H. Haggerson, Chairman of the Board and President of the Corporation. Dr. Curme, as Vice-President, is in charge of all research activities of the Corporation. He has been a leader in the field of chemistry for many years, and is a pioneer in the chemistry of aliphatic compounds, now frequently referred to as petro-chemicals. Dr. Curme has been honored by many awards for his accomplishments in the field of chemistry. He was granted the Chandler Medal by Columbia University to 1933; the Perkin Medal of the Society of the Chemical Industry to 1935; the Elliott Cresson Medal bf Franklin Institute to 1936; the National Pioneer Award of the National Association of Manufacturers in 1940; the Willard Gibbs Medal of the American Chemical Society in 1944. He was elected a Fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences in 1950. More Telephones for Indiana Fanns The Indiana Bell Telephone Company has been installing telephones on ms to Indiana at a fast clip. “Today, 7 out of 10 rural families to Indiana Bell territory have telephones,* A B. Nail, division manager, said. | More than 24,000 telephones have been added in the company's rural areas during the last JHe years, increasing the total from 43,000 to more than 67,000. While all of these rural idephones were being installed, atowice was also improving in stony ways. More than 99% of Indiana Bell rural customers are now served by lines with t parties or less. Just three years ago, this figure was only 66%£ The number of rings a euMby hears besides %is own has been reduced and all rural teMpMnes now have the transmission advantages of two-way metal'Circuits. < Mr. NaH said that rural <Mol-